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Alyssa

Current TV Thinks They Have A Market, But How Do They Beat MSNBC And CNN?

The folks behind Current TV are confident they’ve found an underserved niche in the news market. “We’re going to punch the establishment in the mouth,” Cenk Uygur said at the Television Critics Association press tour on Friday. “They have their plastic, fake, robot anchors on there who do not deliver the news. They give you this he-said, she-said drivel.” “I’ll be able to show you something and listen to these guests and tell our viewers what are talking points and what aren’t talking points,” promised Gov. Jennifer Granholm, whose news show starts on January 30, giving Current a full prime time lineup. “I’ve delivered talking points. I know them when I hear them.” Viewers are “looking for a place that connects the dots in a way that makes sense to them,” Vice President Al Gore told us.

The question is how Current can distinguish itself from its competitors in substance as well as tone—and get viewers to connect the dot from the news they’re watching now on MSNBC or CNN to the different product that is Current. It’s one thing to say, as Uygur did, “If you turn to CNN to find out what’s going on in politics, you’re wasting your time,” or another to point out, as Gore did, that “MSNBC has some liberal-oriented shows in the evening, but they have put on the RNC chairman…They start the day with a conservative show,” and another to get them to switch to another product.

Good journalism and good signings help, of course. Gore touted the fact that the network’s won “won every award in journalism.” And certainly one way Current might distinguish itself from its competitors would be to invest heavily in investigative reporting and documentaries. MSNBC’s been expanding its anchored shows, particularly on weekends with the addition of Chris Hayes and now Melissa Harris-perry, and it’s probably true that Current has to fill out its prime-time lineup to keep up. But breaking stories, providing new reported context on major events, and elevating stories that are flying under the radar would be an even more dramatic break with the existing cable model than simply offering a competing brand of analysis. On MSNBC, Hayes has gotten credit from the tech community for doing a segment on the Stop Online Piracy Act: clearly, there are major communities that feel underserved, and could be up for grabs by a network willing to break out of the standard menu of cable news topics.

It would be particularly interesting to know what’s bringing viewers to Current, particularly since David Bohrman, the network’s president, told us that while the average age of viewers for news coverage on the other cable networks was in the 60s, the average age for Current is 47, and for election coverage, it dipped to 36. “If we can mine this, we’re going to have viewers and customers for many years to come,” Bohrman said. Which is true, but the network needs more of them.

When I asked about how Current intends to boost those numbers, Bohrman said that he didn’t want to reveal too much about the network’s marketing strategy. But he indicated that the rollout of Granholm’s show would be promoted by an advertising blitz similar to the one that launched Keith Olbermann’s show on Current. And he emphasized the importance of having a full primetime lineup of news programming to match the amount of information on other networks. Uygur also suggested that the way Olbermann’s ratings took off when his show took on a more progressive bent was proof of the power of persistence, and that the space he’d opened up already counted as a success: “it allowed all of us to be on television.”

But I’ll be very curious to see what else the network plans to do to fight for market share. Unlike a network like Starz, which is only in 19.5 million households, Current has 63 million subscriber households. It’s less an access problem than getting people to hit the right channel buttons. Mending fences with lynchpin talent like Keith Olbermann, who will be hosting upcoming election coverage for the network, will help. But so could questioning the model of the business Current is in.

Climate Progress

Gaming for Good: Al Gore Brings Climate Reality to Video Games

by Zachary Rybarczyk

Is Al Gore a secret gamer?

Known for advocating climate protection measures through books, movies, TV shows and concerts, the Nobel Laureate is venturing into a new medium to spread his message: video games.

Gore’s nonprofit climate education and advocacy organization, the Climate Reality Project, recently teamed up with global brand and trend consultants at PSFK to challenge design firms to create an interactive video game that uses the momentum of social media and gaming to advocate taking action on climate change and quash misinformation.

Video games and social media will play a key role in the future of fighting climate change, Gore says, as policies needed to accelerate the transition to clean technologies are blocked by oil, gas, and coal industry’s influence on our government.

“The architecture of the public square on the internet is very similar to when the country was founded, when the print-based media were dominant.  Individuals have easy access, almost no barriers to access, ideas matter.”

Watch a short speech and roundtable with Gore on the subject:

Gaming For Good from Piers Fawkes on Vimeo.

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Climate Progress

Gore Is ‘Sorry’ About Newt’s Climate Betrayal, Says He’s Been ‘Bludgeoned’ By Special Interests

Vice President Al Gore is disappointed that Newt Gingrich has turned his back on climate action after having appeared in one of his global warming ads, but doesn’t take it personally. Campaigning for the Republican presidential nomination this year, Gingrich has said the ad he did with Nancy Pelosi in 2007 was the “dumbest single thing I’ve done.” Gore told the Young Turks’ Cenk Uygur that he thinks the Republican candidates are being “bludgeoned” by special interests to “toe the line”:

I appreciated him agreeing to my request that he did it, and I don’t want to be ungracious now. I’m grateful that he did it, and I’m sorry that he’s changed his position. But what it says is more about the condition of the political system today, particularly in the Republican Party, but really across the board. The special interests have so much power, they’re really able to bludgeon the candidates to toe the line.

Watch it:

“Mitt Romney used to have a different position,” Gore noted when asked about Jon Huntsman’s recent climate reversal. “Several of them did.”

NEWS FLASH

Gingrich To Gore In 2008: ‘Your Friend, Newt’ | In 2008, Al Gore called to ask whether Newt Gingrich, the former Republican U.S. House speaker now running for president, would appear in a television ad calling for action to address climate change. Gingrich, who was promoting his latest book Contract With the Earth and urging “green conservatism,” agreed. In an e-mail obtained by Bloomberg News that he wrote to the former vice president, Gingrich thanked Gore “for the opportunity to participate in the Protect Climate ad campaign.” He signed the March 2008 note, “Your friend, Newt.”

Climate Progress

Al Gore: “Count Me Among Those Supporting and Cheering on the Occupy Wall Street Movement”

Former Vice President Al Gore in his home office in Nashville, TN. (Time magazine)The Nobel-Prize winning former Vice President writes on his blog:

From the economy to the climate crisis our leaders have pursued solutions that are not solving our problems, instead they propose policies that accomplish little. With democracy in crisis a true grassroots movement pointing out the flaws in our system is the first step in the right direction. Count me among those supporting and cheering on the Occupy Wall Street movement.

You can support the protests by clicking here.

Here’s more from his post:

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NEWS FLASH

Al Gore Endorses Occupy Wall Street | From the economy to the climate crisis, our leaders have pursued solutions that are not solving our problems,” former Vice President Al Gore wrote on his blog. “Instead they propose policies that accomplish little. With democracy in crisis, a true grassroots movement pointing out the flaws in our system is the first step in the right direction. Count me among those supporting and cheering on the Occupy Wall Street movement.”

Climate Progress

Myles Allen and Guardian Must Retract Phony Quote on Al Gore’s Views of Link Between Climate Change and Weather

Top climatologist Calls Key Allen Critique “clearly wrong.”

Myles Allen, with the complicity of the UK’s Guardian, has put words into Al Gore’s mouth in order to attack the Nobel-Prize winning former Vice President.  What makes this attack a particularly egregious breach of journalism is that Allen and the Guardian could have avoided it had they spent even 30 seconds reading their own damn links.

As we’ll see, what Gore is actually saying about the link between extreme weather and climate change is something countless scientists and independent experts have been saying — and throughout this post I will run through what many of the experts have said.

Indeed, the journal Nature just ran a story just last month with this headline:

Climate and weather: Extreme measures

Can violent hurricanes, floods and droughts be pinned on climate change? Scientists are beginning to say yes.

It is in this context that we have this phony attack on Gore in the Guardian:

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Climate Progress

Gore’s Climate Reality Finale — What Do You Think?

I’m interested in your thoughts on Gore’s final presentation in “24 Hours of Reality.”  For those who missed it, here it is:

Video streaming by Ustream

I do think it is important to judge this as a communications effort aimed at three groups — activists, those who already are concerned about global warming, and the plausibly persuadable — the audience I aim for, but obviously a broader slice of the public than Climate Progress reaches.

The “24 hour long event had 8.6 million views,” writes Maggie L. Fox, President & CEO of  the Climate Reality Project, which I would count as success.  Fox has more to say that is worth reading, including, “important actions you can take today”:

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Climate Progress

NYTimes.com Strikes False Balance On Climate Change

Jill Fitzsimmons & Jocelyn Fong in a Media Matters cross-post

In a report for the New York Times‘ website about Al Gore’s “24 Hours of Reality” event about climate change, ClimateWire lent a megaphone to Canadian climate contrarian Tom Harris. The reporter summarized Gore’s event and then, ostensibly to provide balance, turned the rest of the article over to Harris, who thinks Gore’s event spent “time and energy on something that’s not true.”

ClimateWire quoted Harris’ claims that the “amount of climate change impact that humans have is very small,” and “This extreme weather thing is not a function of temperature,” as well as his allegation that “90 percent of the important facts [in Gore's presentations] are wrong or misrepresented.” The article offered no details to support this claim. Nor did mention that the vast majority of scientists agree that humans are changing the climate. And at no point did the article explain who Tom Harris is or why he was quoted evaluating statements about science instead of, say, a climate scientist.

Elsewhere on the Times’ website, Andrew Revkin has explained what’s wrong with this type of reporting:

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Climate Progress

LIVE: Watch Al Gore’s Conclusion To 24 Hours Of Climate Reality

ThinkProgress Green is covering the Climate Reality Project’s 24 Hours of Reality live from New York City.

A day which began 23 hours ago in Mexico City at 7 PM local time on Wednesday has wrapped around the world, reaching New York City. Former Vice President Al Gore is leading the ultimate presentation of how greenhouse pollution is making our weather more dangerous and deadly, and leading the global discussion on how humanity can rise up to take back our future from the fossil-funded deniers.

Watch here:

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